Jim Seams

Item

Full Name
Jim Seams
Victim Profile
Jim Seams
Biography
On January 27th, 1888, Jim Seams, age unknown, was nearly lynched in Tuscaloosa near the Old City Jail by an enraged white mob after he reportedly shot and killed Deputy Sheriff John M. Autrey. Seams allegedly shot Autrey when the deputy attempted to serve him an arrest warrant at his home. Seams would remain adamant until the end of his life that he acted out of self defense. State troopers protected him from being lynched at the hands of white Tuscaloosa citizens so that he could be put on trial, after which he was given a death sentence and lynched by the state on
January 25th, 1889. Seams lived in a small neighborhood called Austin near the community of Hull. His last words were, “I'm going right home to glory. I know I am, for my sins have all been forgiven.”
Documented or Attempted
Attempted
Birth Date
N/A
County of Birth; County of Death
N/A; Tuscaloosa County
Death Date
January 25, 1889
Date of Attempted Lynching
January 27, 1888
Race
Black
Sex
Male
Researchers
Cade Hampton
Case Number
AMP 125-18880127-000
Identified by:
Alabama Memory Project

Linked resources

Items with "Lynching Event Data for: Jim Seams"
Title Class
Jim Seams Event